Gnod lyrics
Artist · 18 919 listeners per month
Artist's albums
Live At Roadburn Festival 2022
2023 · album
Hexen Valley
2022 · album
Still Runnin'
2022 · single
Bad Apple
2022 · single
La Mort Du Sens
2021 · album
Regimental
2021 · single
Pink Champagne Blues
2021 · single
Gnod vs. JK Flesh
2021 · EP
The Fight (JK Flesh Version)
2021 · single
Not Listening (Gnod Version)
2021 · single
Self Served (Gnod Version)
2021 · single
Parasitic Systems (JK Flesh Version)
2021 · single
Easy To Build, Hard To Destroy
2021 · album
They Live
2020 · single
Faca De Fogo
2020 · album
Split
2020 · single
Be Aware Of Your Limitations (Andrew Liles)
2018 · album
Chapel Perilous
2018 · album
Donovan's Daughters
2018 · single
Live At Roadburn 2021
2017 · album
Mirror
2016 · album
Infinity Machines
2015 · album
The Somnambulist's Tale
2014 · single
Chaudelande
2013 · album
Similar artists
Loop
Artist
Bardo Pond
Artist
USA Nails
Artist
Shit And Shine
Artist
The Heads
Artist
Oxbow
Artist
Hey Colossus
Artist
BIG|BRAVE
Artist
Minami Deutsch
Artist
Oneida
Artist
Part Chimp
Artist
Carlton Melton
Artist
Biography
Gnod are a psychedelic noise-rock collective from Manchester, England. Since forming in 2006, the group has had an ever-shifting lineup of multi-instrumentalists and vocalists, but some of the group's key members have included Paddy Shine, Chris Haslam, Neil Francis, and Marlene Ribeiro. Along with their roster, Gnod's music has constantly evolved and morphed, ranging from hallucinatory Krautrock-influenced folk to dubby, acid-drenched post-punk. Their music is far more aggressive and darker than most bands associated with the modern psychedelic rock scene, having as much in common with Public Image Ltd. or Swans as with Hawkwind or Guru Guru. The group's lyrics and album artwork often mock religion (particularly on albums like 2011's In Gnod We Trust), and are heavily critical of politics and society, as evidenced by releases like 2017's Just Say No to the Psycho Right-Wing Capitalist Fascist Industrial Death Machine. Gnod have been acclaimed for their immersive performances and installations that involve audience participation, and they have performed at festivals such as Roadburn and the Liverpool International Festival of Psychedelia. They have released collaborations with artists such as White Hills, Justin Broadrick, percussionist João Pais Filipe, and others. Gnod made their debut in 2007 with a self-released CD-R titled Abstehen der Ohren. The following year, Sloow Tapes released the group's cassette The Somnambulist's Tale. They also collaborated with American space rock band White Hills for the first time, resulting in the limited tour CD-R Aquarian Downer. They released several other limited CD-Rs and cassettes, but their vinyl debut was a self-titled 2009 LP issued by Pariah Child. The same year, they released a split 7"/CD-R with U.K. doom-psych band Bong, as well as a second collaboration with White Hills, Drop Out. Their third collaboration, Gnod Drop Out with White Hills II, appeared on Rocket Recordings in 2010. The double-LP's sprawling Krautrock-influenced jams made an impact on the modern psych scene, and the album was re-pressed several times over the following years. Later in 2010, Not Not Fun released a split 7" between Gnod and Robedoor as part of the label's Bored Fortress series. Gnod kicked off 2011 by sharing a split LP with A Middle Sex, released by Blackest Rainbow. Rocket released In Gnod We Trust in June, and the first of two volumes of Chaudelande appeared on Tamed Records in October. The second was released in 2012. Gnod put out splits with Gammelfleisch and Shit & Shine, and their 7" single "5th Sun" appeared on Trensmat. The same label also released Gnod Presents Dwellings & Druss, a techno-influenced LP featuring solo tracks by Haslam and Shine. Also in 2013, Rocket issued a CD compiling the tracks from both Chaudelande albums, and in 2014, Gnod shared a limited-split 7" with Eternal Tapestry as part of God Unknown Records' singles club. Belgian label Aguirre Records reissued The Somnambulist's Tale on vinyl. Gnod's ambitious double-CD/triple-LP Infinity Machines was released by Rocket in 2015. Consisting of lengthy hypnotic soundscapes incorporating influences such as free jazz and dark ambient, the album also contained more politically oriented lyrics than their prior work. This continued with the dark, dubby post-punk of 2016's Mirror, also released by Rocket. Gnod released Behind the Lids, a drone collaboration with Anthony Child (Surgeon), the same year. In 2017, they responded to the political climate with Just Say No to the Psycho Right-Wing Capitalist Fascist Industrial Death Machine. The concert recording Live at Roadburn 2012 was also issued. Gnod swiftly returned in 2018 with Chapel Perilous, which took its name from the philosophical writings of Robert Anton. Another set recorded at Roadburn was released as Be Aware of Your Limitations. In 2020, Gnod released Faca de Fogo, a collaboration with Portuguese percussionist João Pais Filipe. Additionally, the Quietus digitally released the remix EP JK Flesh vs. Gnod. Easy to Build, Hard to Destroy, a compilation of early rarities, was issued in 2021, preceding the release of the next proper album, Mort Du Sens, later the same year. That summer members of the group headed to a co-op house, the Nutclough Tavern, in Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire. There, led by Paddy Shine, the band was inspired by the small town's location and the conversations of the people living there. Together with Sam Greenwood, they headed to the Hebden Bridge Underground studios to record new material with the resulting sessions eventually becoming 2022's Hexen Valley. ~ Paul Simpson, Rovi